Wednesday, February 25, 2009

I fully hope that if any bank were nationalized now, it would have been re-privatized by 2016

From Felix Salmon:

"
Why Nationalize in 2016?

The key number in Treasury's latest bank bailout plan is 7: that's the number of years that banks will have to repay the government before they get nationalized the preferred stock converts to common equity.

I think it's fair to say that those of us in favor of bank nationalization want nationalization now, when it would be very useful in terms of bringing down the banks' cost of funds and helping to erase the counterparty mistrust which is currently endemic to the system. Nationalization in seven years' time does no good to anybody. Indeed, I fully hope that if any bank were nationalized now, it would have been re-privatized by 2016.

In the meantime, the government's bailout money will be earning a healthy 9% interest rate for we taxpayers -- yet another liability which the banks are going to struggle to be able to meet. Hasn't the government learned its lesson from AIG? Burdening leveraged financial institutions with expensive new debt doesn't help them, it hurts them. Especially when they have no choice in whether or not to accept that burden."

Me:

"Hasn't the government learned its lesson from AIG?"

As near as I can tell, it's the same model. How long until the 9% is lobbied down to 5% and falling? The only way that they'll be able to afford 9%, 9%, is if there's hyperinflation.

"Indeed, I fully hope that if any bank were nationalized now, it would have been re-privatized by 2016."

There's just no convincing some people that hybrids are harder to get rid of and costlier than just biting the bullet now and taking the banks over. Does 7 years at least begin to make the point? And this is a rosy scenario crowd.

I have to say that I thought that a big reason for the stress test was to convince possible buyers of these Holding Companies assets that the assets weren't complete crap. In other words, the government would try and vouch for them. Something tells me that such a plan might not work. I'm not sure investors are going near these assets without monstrous subsidies or pennies on the dollar prices, even with the government involved. In other words,even if we seize these Holding Companies, has the government now appeared clueless enough to scare away possible investors as well?

We'd better hope that this approach works. We seem to be stuck with it.

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